How to Fossilize Your Hamster: And Other Amazing Experiments for the Armchair Scientist

And Other Amazing Experiments for the Armchair ScientistRating: Rated 4.0 stars (1 reviews)
Author: Mick O’Hare
Publisher: Holt Paperbacks
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Book Description

Outrageously entertaining and educational experiments from the team behind the phenomenal international bestseller Does Anything Eat Wasps?
How can you measure the speed of light with a bar of chocolate and a microwave oven? To keep a banana from decaying, are you better off rubbing it with lemon juice or refrigerating it? How can you figure out how much your head weighs? Mick O’Hare, who created the New Scientist’s popular science sensations Does Anything Eat Wasps? and Why Don’t Penguins’ Feet Freeze?, has the answers.

In this fascinating and irresistible new book, O’Hare and the New Scientist team guide you through one hundred intriguing experiments that show essential scientific principles (and human curiosity) in action. Explaining everything from the unusual chemical reaction between Mentos and cola that provokes a geyser to the geological conditions necessary to preserve a family pet for eternity, How to Fossilize Your Hamster is fun, hands-on science that everyone will want to try at home.

One Comment

  1. A Reviewer
    Posted February 17, 2008 at 3:29 pm | Permalink

    How to Fossilize Your Hamster: And Other Amazing Experiments for the Armchair Scientist has been rated 4 starsInteresting

    About: New Scientist writer O’Hare provides instructions explains a multitude of science experiments that can easily be done at home.

    Pros: Very interesting, varied topics and experiments. Written in easy-to-understand language. My favorite topics included the best ways to get ketchup out of a bottle, how to test if talking on a cell phone affects your reaction time (it does), why hot water freezes faster than cold water, why your vision is blurry underwater, how to extract iron from cereal and DNA from yourself. Apparently, Alka-Seltzer can be used for several cool experiments.

    Cons: No sources cited. A further reading section would’ve been nice